Five Chinese magnesia brick manufacturers submitted a petition
last Friday against the largest refractory material maker in the
world to a Chinese court for violation of China's Anti-Unfair
Competition Law.
The five Chinese companies, all from Northeast China's Liaoning
Province, sued the Austria-based RHI AG at the High People's
Court of Liaoning saying it violated Chinese law by fabricating
stories and causing economic losses to Chinese counterparts in an
anti-dumping case it initiated in the European Union.
This lawsuit is the latest reaction by the Chinese enterprises
in this anti-dumping case. It is the first time Chinese enterprises
accused of dumping have fought back with Chinese laws.
The EU launched the anti-dumping investigation against 57
Chinese magnesia brick makers, including one subordinate joint
venture of RHI, on July 13 this year. The case was initiated by an
industrial council of European refractories makers, RHI, and a
Germany-based magnesia brick maker, LWB GMBH.
Eight enterprises, which included the five that filed the suit,
answered the case and submitted documents appealing for market
economy status. But the EU granted this status to only two, who
were founded respectively by a South Korean factory and a British
factory.
The EU took Turkey as a substitute country for price evaluation
in this case.
But experts said the cost for the production of mag-carbon
bricks, one kind of magnesia brick and the major product of Chinese
refractory companies, is at least 20 percent higher in Turkey than
in China, because both the magnesite and labor costs are higher in
Turkey.
"This anti-dumping case is totally a conspiracy of RHI AG
because it is planning to kick its Chinese counterparts out of the
European market," Fu Donghui, a lawyer from Beijing Allbright Law
Offices, said on behalf of the plaintiffs.
"Chinese enterprises are not afraid of free competition with
overseas rivals, but we strongly oppose the behavior of unfair
competition by using anti-dumping charges as a tool," said Fu.
He said the Chinese side had put forward detailed information to
the court to testify what RHI did was definitely unfair competition
behavior.
RHI AG recently established its second magnesia bricks factory
in Dalian, Liaoning.
"RHI's actions are self-contradictory because it is taking the
advantages of low material and labor costs in China while blocking
the expansion of Chinese enterprises at the same time," said Yu Yi,
a senior official with Yingkou Qinghua Group, one of the
plaintiffs.
The plaintiffs claim RHI AG should withdraw its anti-dumping
appeal to the EU so as to bring the case to an end; otherwise it
will be asked to pay high compensation to the Chinese
companies.
In case a penalty tariff is imposed on all mag-carbon bricks
from China, it will be a blow against Chinese private enterprises
in this sector, which rely on exports, while its influence on RHI
will not be remarkable, for the multinational giant may take other
measures to shun the duties.
"It can export its products out of China to the European market
and sell products originating from China to other parts of the
world," Fu said.
(China Daily December 20, 2004)